księżycowy wrote:Interesting indeed that you learned Mohawk while working on a Cheyenne translation of the NT!
Formiko wrote:I was more of a gofer, I didn't do any real cool stuff, but it was pretty wild that I learned Mohawk from a Cheyenne translator
You're just like me. I've taken over 300 classes in NDN languages, and I taught a Native Language Awareness class, but not enough people care about Native languages anymore. The Pama-Nyungan languages are getting all the love now, and I know not one thing about them. They never interested me.
Book | Francis-Smith | Listuguj |
ê | ɨ | ɨ (or) ' |
ĝ | q | q |
'p | p | p |
à (long a) | á (or) a' | a' |
g | k | g |
ay | ay (or) ai | ai |
aw | aw (or) au | au |
ey | ey (or) ei | ei |
księżycowy wrote:Not exactly sure what you mean by NDN languages,
limoneneis wrote:Do you know if any of the algic languages actually has a "real" textbook, I mean with dialogs, audio and exercises, not just a phrasebook?
limoneneis wrote:Thank you, księżycowy! The Spoken Cree looks good
ILuvEire wrote:Do you know of a real Micmac textbook? I hate using PDFs ><
lacustrine wrote:I didn't see an Ojibwe-specific thread so I created one and added my links http://www.unilang.org/viewtopic.php?f=99&t=31687.
lacustrine wrote:I have not really found a good textbook for this language yet, which is surprising given the number of speakers in the US and Canada. If anyone knows of one please link it here.
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